Triazine herbicide prometryn alters epoxide hydrolase activity and increases cytochrome P450 metabolites in murine livers via lipidomic profiling
Rasheed O. Sule, Christophe Morisseau, Jun Yang, Bruce D. Hammock, Aldrin V. Gomes

TL;DR
Prometryn, a herbicide, disrupts liver lipid metabolism in mice, leading to increased oxidative stress and potential liver toxicity.
Contribution
This study identifies prometryn's impact on oxylipin metabolism and enzyme activity in murine livers using lipidomic profiling.
Findings
Prometryn increases epoxide hydrolase activity and CYP-derived oxylipins in mice livers.
Prometryn treatment elevates 9-HODE and 13-HODE levels, indicating oxidative stress.
The herbicide alters lipid metabolism and induces hepatotoxic effects via sEH and mEH enzyme activation.
Abstract
Oxylipins are a group of bioactive fatty acid metabolites generated via enzymatic oxygenation. They are notably involved in inflammation, pain, vascular tone, hemostasis, thrombosis, immunity, and coagulation. Oxylipins have become the focus of therapeutic intervention since they are implicated in many conditions, such as nonalcoholic fatty liver disease, cardiovascular disease, and aging. The liver plays a crucial role in lipid metabolism and distribution throughout the organism. Long-term exposure to pesticides is suspected to contribute to hepatic carcinogenesis via notable disruption of lipid metabolism. Prometryn is a methylthio-s-triazine herbicide used to control the growth of annual broadleaf and grass weeds in many cultivated plants. The amounts of prometryn documented in the environment, mainly waters, soil and plants used for human and domestic consumption are significantly…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEicosanoids and Hypertension Pharmacology · Pharmacogenetics and Drug Metabolism · Alcohol Consumption and Health Effects
